Let's Talk About It

One way to look at negotiation is as an extended volley of
Q&A. In the early game, your thoughtful queries will help break
the ice, assess character and gauge leverage. In the middle game,
they'll help you extract information, generate alternatives and
focus the open issues. And in the end game, you will use them
skillfully to persuade, pin down and close.

The open-ended question is the closest thing deal-makers have to
a Swiss Army knife. These are questions that begin with who, what,
where, when, how or why. Because they cannot be answered with a
simple yes or no, they will encourage your opponent to talk and,
hopefully, give you strategic information. They are valuable at all
stages of a deal, but especially so at the beginning, when each
side is sizing up the other. Ask them innocently, if you can. Use
the power of silence. Listen to the answers carefully. With luck,
your opponent will tell you far more than he or she should.

As real discussions begin, questions become more precise. Ask
"why" or "why not" to uncover underlying
concerns. Ask "how" to explore your opponent's
methods of doing business. Ask "what if" to explore
alternatives. Let your natural curiosity guide you. "How
exactly does that calculation work?" "Would you mind
giving me an example?" "Hmmm . . . how does this
deduction differ from that deduction?" It's OK to probe,
just be able to know when you hit a nerve. Here are some other
effective queries: "Why is that fair?" "What would
you do in my position?" "Are you the one who will make
the final decision?" "What kinds of deals are you making
with others?"

When talks conclude, negotiators begin to sound like
salespeople. Questions are designed to seal a deal. "If I make
this last concession, can we shake on it?" "Would you
like it in harvest gold or tropical pink?" "Shall I have
my lawyer send your lawyer signature copies?" As David Mamet
wrote in his play Glengarry Glen Ross, "Always be
closing."

Although there is no canon or custom about which questions to
ask when, certain lines of inquiry will keep you from getting to
yes. Unless you know how to get your way by blustering, don't
use questions to insult, threaten, accuse or show how smart you
are. Loaded questions and other indirect jabs are not particularly
helpful either. Just as important as which question to ask is how
you ask it. Negotiation is not interrogation. Watch your tone.
Remember, if you give attitude, you'll probably get
attitude.

Questions are more powerful than answers. I agree with writer
James Thurber: "It is better to know some of the questions
than all of the answers." An answer you can usually find. But
beware: If you don't ask the right questions, I guarantee you
won't know what hit you.

A speaker and attorney in Los Angeles, Marc Diener is the author of
Deal Power.